
Stevie Nicks is seen twirling, but not like her signature stage move - this time it was with a baton. The whole scene was filmed, and the footage used to make the music video. Rehearsals took place in late May, and the day of the recording, each band member signed a release and was paid a dollar. This was a few weeks after graduation, so while some band members didn't show, most did, since just about everyone had a copy of Rumours in their dorm room and was thrilled to play on a Fleetwood Mac track. The USC Trojan Marching Band was recorded at Dodger Stadium on Jwhile the Los Angeles Dodgers were on a road trip. And we're going to film it.' They thought, 'For sure, he's blown it.

By this time they'd thought for sure I'm round the twist, and I said, 'Well, I'm going to pay for it.

So I resurrected that, much to everyone's amazement, and I insisted on recording the USC marching band at Dodger Stadium. It's a glorious noise, and it's something I'm proud of because it's all drums. When it came time to make the album, we pulled that riff out, screwed around with it, put it in the dustbin, and then a year into making that album, I pulled it out again and took it with me as a rough track to Normandy and came up with the idea of using the brass band on it, and using about 100 drummers on it, which we did. Speaking with Johnny Black in 1995, Mick Fleetwood explained how it happened: "In soundchecks we used to jam on that riff, and I did the riff in drum form. Mick Fleetwood decided to use a big brass sound after a visit to Europe in 1978 where he saw brass bands marching down the street. The University of Southern California marching band played on this track. When it came time to record the Tusk album, they decided to use it for a song. The music was based on a riff the band used to play when they were introduced at concerts as the lights came up and they were introduced to the audience. I wasn't told that until quite a while after the record was done, and when I did find out I liked the title even less!" I don't recall it being (Mick's slang term for the male member), that went right over my prudish little head. Even then, in 1979 you just thought, the rhinos are being poached and that tusks are being stolen and the elephants are being slaughtered and ivory is being sold on the black market. Stevie Nicks recalled to Mojo in 2015: "I didn't understand the title, there was nothing beautiful or elegant about the word 'tusk.' It really bought to mind those people stealing ivory. When Stevie Nicks heard the album was going to be called Tusk, she objected, but Mick Fleetwood really wanted to use the title, so he ignored her and she dropped the subject. The "Tusk" is slang for penis, so the song is basically about sex.

that link doesn't bring you right to the page.
